Abstract

Analysis of natural killer (NK) activity in different organs from mice or rats fractionated using discontinuous density gradients have revealed typical distinct density profiles according to the organ from which the NK cells were derived. High NK level organs thus tended to have significant lytic activity extending into 1.090 density fractions whereas the low NK population had its peak activity more strictly confined to the 1.067 fraction. The reason for this skewedness we find to be dependent upon the presence of an inhibitor cell for NK cells to be found in the higher-density fractions. The significance of this inhibitor cell was more apparent when NK activity was low, thus skewing peak levels to lower fractions. The activity of this inhibitory cell was not found to vary with age, thus failing to explain the age-dependent rise and fall of NK activity in rodents. Presence of such an inhibitory cell also explains why sizeable NK activity can be disclosed in a fraction of cells obtained from a population which before fractionation failed to disclose NK function.

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